Home education growing in Russia

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Smiles better: learning at home can be very effectivePhoto: Alamy / Legion Media

Maria Agranovich, Rossiyskaya Gazeta

3:52PM BST 30 Apr 2012

More and more parents in Russia are opting to educate their children at home believing it will be better for them than going to school.

Seven-year-old Alisa Chupova begins her day at 9am. After breakfast, it’s time for writing: Alisa inscribes words in her copybook. Her mother sits next to her and watches carefully to make sure she holds her pencil correctly and that the letters are fine. After that comes reading. Today, Alisa reads several pages from Vitaly Bianki’s Forest Newspaper. Then it’s time for some exercise.

At about one o’clock, Alisa and her mother, along with Alisa’s younger brother, go to the Zoological Museum to see what those quails, partridges and hawks from Bianki’s tales look like. There are few in the museum on weekdays, making it easy to conduct the nature lesson.

Alisa is not being kept away from school because of any underlying health problems; her mother simply opted to educate her at home. As in Britain, it is entirely legal to do so.

The popularity of home education is growing in Russia. In just a few years, the numbers have increased nearly tenfold from a mere 11,000 children in 2008 to around 100,000 now.

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Estimates of the numbers of home-educated children in Britain vary, but it is thought to be roughly 50,000, while in the United States, more than two million are taught at home. US research suggests that home education is one-and-a-half times more effective than traditional schooling.

“At home, I can plan my child’s day in a way that is good for the family,” says Alisa’s mother Ekaterina. “It makes more sense to go swimming in the morning when there are few people in the pool; after that we can go home and do some schooling. It’s also good to visit museums on weekdays when they are not crowded and you can go and look at paintings and other exhibits in peace. With the academic work, Alisa works at her own pace – there is no need to hurry.”

All children have to cover key subjects wherever their learning takes place. But professional support is available from various institutes who offer remote or online consultations and teaching courses for parents.

“It is much more difficult than just sending your child to school,” says Ekaterina. “It’s a big responsibility. At school, we share that responsibility with teachers, or just shrug it off completely.

“The main danger associated with home schooling is that children do not get enough social skills,” warns Elena Kutepova, deputy director of the Institute for Integrative (Inclusive) Education at the Moscow State University of Psychology and Education.

“Children going to conventional schools build relationships with other children and adults – relationships that cannot be built within just one family.”

Many British parents work in small groups with other home educators so that the children can socialise and the adults share the teaching; in Russia, home-schooled children rely more on clubs for their socialisation. Ms Kutepova says that although clubs can help children with social adaptation skills, it is only at school that they develop a sense of responsibility.